Goodnesses [noun]

Definition of Goodnesses:

decency, excellence

Opposite/Antonyms of Goodnesses:


Sentence/Example of Goodnesses:

Thank goodness that we have this private-sector expertise that we want to shape into a global public good that gets to everybody on the planet.

Plato thought that before birth we resided in the world of “the Forms,” together with numbers, universals, and goodness itself.

We’re all bogged down and floundering, questioning our own goodness while we arch our eyebrows at our friends and argue over whose patch of muck is really solid ground.

We’re capable of great evil in some cases, but we’re also capable of great goodness.

So they don’t want to actually confront the United States Navy, for goodness sake.

And he stood up in the shameful fall of the people: in the goodness and readiness of his soul he appeased God for Israel.

In truth, M. de Biancourt's goodness and prudence seemed much shaken by this tempest of human passions.

Goodness only knew what a falchion was, but there was the Griffin, and his history was an improvement upon the eternal Cat.

After all she, Hilda, possessed some mysterious characteristic more potent than the elegance and the goodness of Janet Orgreave.

One finds new friends;—and dear little girls; and—goodness knows what I shall find next.